ICT Architect Brussels, Belgium
Description
As a Solution & Development Architect within the Proactive Services team, you are the driving force behind the architectural direction and technical coherence of the applications developed by the team (including Automatic Advice and MAGDA Mock). You make final decisions regarding design choices, while respecting and incorporating team input. In doing so, you safeguard the maintainability and scalability of the applications. You work closely with the Product Owner and Technical Analyst and clearly translate technical decisions into business language.
As an architect, you help design platform extensions, translate business requirements into working systems, guarantee the lifecycle of the applications, enrich the business roadmap with the necessary technical work packages, and contribute to defining user stories. You document architectural decisions and translate them into clear specifications and guidelines for the team. You are eager to learn and prefer thoughtful methodologies over the latest framework hype.
You will join a small and proactive team of doers where open communication is central. Developers actively contribute to design decisions, and you facilitate this process by gathering opinions, challenging ideas, and constructively weighing alternatives. At the same time, you ensure overall coherence and make the final decision. You feel strong ownership of the product and contribute to a results-oriented culture.
Additionally, you regularly coordinate with fellow architects within the Data Integration team and the Data Platform department and follow the guidelines of the architecture chapter. In your work, you apply the three pillars that contribute to a safer, more scalable, and reliable digitalization of the Flemish government:
Skills
Context
Digitaal Vlaanderen has the mission of building a coherent government-wide information policy and supporting and realizing the transition of the Flemish Government toward a data-driven government. The agency’s products and services are organized into programs to maximize synergies and provide optimal services to Flemish Government partners.
Digitaal Vlaanderen is a digitalization agency of the Flemish Government focused on the digital transformation of services and collaboration between governments, citizens, and businesses. It supports Flemish and local governments in their digital transformation and their vision of the government of tomorrow.
Business Context
The MAGDA Datahub (MAximale GegevensDeling tussen Administraties) centralizes federal and Flemish authentic data sources and securely exchanges this data within the Flemish Government. This enables the principle of “collect once, reuse multiple times.”
During the current government term, the MAGDA Datahub is being expanded together with the Open and Geo Data Building Blocks into a Flemish Data Integration Platform (VDI platform) to harmonize data flows within the Flemish Government.
Automatic Advice is a logical layer on top of the data that translates regulations into automated decision-making, determining whether citizens or companies qualify for benefits. This allows decisions to be made faster and more consistently while reducing administrative burden for end users.
The MAGDA Mock simulates the MAGDA Datahub with test data, without privacy or security risks. Applications using the MAGDA Datahub, such as Automatic Advice, can therefore be tested safely and in a privacy-friendly manner.
Technical Context
The architect will initially focus on the following objectives:
Technology Stack
The team works within a modern integration landscape including:
Backend & Integration
Messaging & Eventing
APIs & Integration Protocols
Testing & Simulation
Data Processing & Storage
Modeling & Documentation
Rule Engine
Data Ecosystem
Additional Standards & Principles
Additional Job Information
Desired Mindset & Soft Skills
Additional Notes
Important Notice
This assignment is partially funded through the European Union’s Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF). To secure this funding, the “Do No Significant Harm” (DNSH) principle must be respected.
By submitting an offer, the bidder commits to ensuring that the execution of the assignment does not significantly harm the following six environmental objectives: